Small diatoms (Bacillariophyta) in cultures from the Styx River, New Zealand, including descriptions of three new species
Author
Novis, Phil M.
Allan Herbarium, Landcare Research, P. O. Box 40, Lincoln 7640, New Zealand
Author
Braidwood, Jasmine
Allan Herbarium, Landcare Research, P. O. Box 40, Lincoln 7640, New Zealand
Author
Kilroy, Cathy
National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research, P. O. Box 8602, Christchurch, New Zealand
text
Phytotaxa
2012
2012-08-24
64
1
11
45
http://biotaxa.org/Phytotaxa/article/view/phytotaxa.64.1.3
journal article
10.11646/phytotaxa.64.1.3
1179-3163
5062002
Planothidium victori
sp. nov.
P.M. Novis, J. Braidwood & C. Kilroy (
Figs 26–41
,
161
)
Frustules elliptic-lanceolate in valve view, monoraphid, 14.0–
16.5 µm
long, 5.0–
5.2 µm
wide. Frustules rotationally asymmetric to a variable degree in valve view, from almost linear to slightly curved near one pole to incised near one pole to form a hook. Striae transverse to slightly radiate at central area to more strongly radiate at poles, 14–15(–16) in
10 µm
, multiseriate. Araphid valve asymmetric at central area where striae are interrupted by a “hoofmark” structure (
Fig. 40
;
sensu
Round & Bukhtiyarova 1996
) appressed to inner valve surface. Position of hooked pole relative to hoofmark shows that hook can occur at either pole (but never both;
Fig. 38
). Araphid valve slightly convex, raphid valve slightly concave; frustules thus curved in girdle view (
Fig. 39
),
3.6–4.5 µm
wide. Raphe straight, with expanded proximal area and terminal fissures curved towards the secondary valve side; internally, central ends are weakly curved. Sternum linear.
Type
:
—
NEW ZEALAND
:
Canterbury
:
Styx River
(lat. 43°27.800, long. 172°36.213), periphyton,
P.M. Novis
and
J. Braidwood
,
4 November 2009
(
CHR618408
!; cleaned frustules made from culture
LCR-S
:18:1:1)
.
Distribution:
—this new species is only known from site
4 in
the Styx River,
Canterbury
,
New Zealand
, to date.
Etymology:
—named for Victor Brown, a long-serving co-ordinator of water quality monitoring volunteers in the Styx catchment.
Molecular data:
—The closest match to this strain’s 18S sequence is
P. lanceolatum
L1249, isolated from
USA
(p-distance = 0.024). The closest match to its
rbc
L sequence is
P. frequentissimum
LCR-S:2:1:1 (pdistance = 0.024; the
rbc
L sequence of L1249 is not available). The Styx strain formed a robust clade with L
1249 in
both Bayesian and MPB analyses of 18S sequences, and a robust clade with LCR-S:2:1:
1 in
both Bayesian and MPB analyses of
rbc
L sequences (
Fig. 161
). The length of the 18S fragment was 428 bp, in an overall dataset 1775 bp long with 296 variable sites (161 parsimony informative, 48 occurring within the fragment from the Styx strain). The model selected by BIC and implemented in the Bayesian analysis was T92+G. The length of the
rbc
L fragment was 671 bp, in an overall dataset 1473 bp long with 956 variable sites (379 parsimony informative, 181 occurring with the fragment from the Styx strain). The model selected by BIC and implemented in the Bayesian analysis was GTR+G+I.
Observations:
—
P. victori
falls within the size range of
P. lanceolatum
as described by
Krammer & Lange-Bertalot (1991)
, but the non-hooked valves of
P. victori
are thinner and with more acutely rounded ends. The asymmetrically bent or hooked variants of this species are presumably teratological. The asymmetry occurs in frustules that are also of shorter length (so could be a result of the size limitation of asexual reproduction), since it has been postulated that diatom species can no longer initiate their sexual cycle beyond a “cardinal point” of size decrease, and many frustules below this size are reputed to become teratological (
Kociolek & Stoermer 2010
). Such forms can occur as a result of physical or chemical stress during development (
Falasco
et al.
2009
;
Kociolek & Stoermer 2010
). This morphotype was found in both field material and cultures, but no other teratological forms were found for any other species under any conditions in the Styx. Although
Golder Associates (2009)
reported levels of Cd, Cr, and Cu above background levels about
1 km
upstream of site 4, none of these exceeded the ISQG-low level (below this level, adverse effects on aquatic life are regarded as unlikely). Thus,
P. victori
seems particularly sensitive to contamination and may be a useful indicator species.
Although the cells resemble
P. frequentissimum
, which was also recovered from the Styx, the two strains clearly differed in their
rbc
L sequences, and in length, width, and stria density, so one is not a variant form of the other.
Order
Bacillariales
Family
Bacillariaceae